In one of my all-time favorite South Park episodes, the boys get assigned Catcher in the Rye in school, only to find that it's not nearly as offensive as they'd been promised, and set out to write a properly offensive book, which they call "The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs.

Remember that girl in Hamburg, Germany who a few weeks ago had over 1,500 people show up for a birthday party at her parents house when she announced it with an open invitation on Facebook, causing over 100 police officers to have to be dispatched to break up the party.

Not that we resent science for simply trying to advance robotics, but when you build something, look at it, and realize you've built a Terminator hand, you really have to ask yourself what, precisely, you're trying to achieve as a scientist and whether it happens to be a good thing.

Fresh off his awesome-looking Auschwitz movie, which in turn followed quickly on the heels of his brilliant-looking Darfur movie with a misspelled trailer starring Billy Zane (side note: it's almost as if he's not taking much time on these), Uwe Boll is going back to intentional comedy with Blubberella.

The idea that an actor could undergo a drastic transformation for a role and automatically become a candidate for critical acclaim
Scientists in Germany have developed software that can make actors appear thinner, fatter, taller or more buff on screen.